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My Personal Knowledge Management Approach

Clark Quinn

So with no further ado, here’s my personal knowledge management approach. First, Harold’s Personal Knowledge Management ( PKM ) model has three components: seek, sense, and share. Seeking is about information coming in, that is, what you’re looking for and the feeds you track.

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7 Tech Tools & Skills Trainers Must Have

TalentLMS

If using information from the site, cite your sources in the desired format (APA, MLA Chicago, Harvard, etc.). The overwhelming surge in popular social media hangouts like Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest, Facebook, Snapchat, Google+, YouTube, as well as the true power that blogs have, all tell us where the potential learners are.

Skills 40
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50 HR and Corporate Training Must-Follow Twitter Accounts

OpenSesame

If you are looking to expand your network, Twitter is a great place to start. For this week’s Productivity Wednesday, we’ve compiled a list of the top 50 Human Resources Twitter influences so that you can keep up to date on the latest news and trends within the field of HR. Thinking out joining Twitter?

Twitter 52
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My Top 10 Learning Tools

Clark Quinn

Harold Jarche talks about our personal knowledge management task, and in that, there are the tools I use to capture and share my own thinking (like this), and tools I use to go out and find or follow information. Twitter – this has been quite the revelation, seeing pointers and getting support, and of course #lrnchat.

Tools 174
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Building eLearning Scenarios in Working Sessions with SMEs

Integrated Learnings

But how do you write these scenarios in the first place? After all, crafting a realistic scenario requires leveraging tacit knowledge that only a subject matter expert (SME) might possess. Knowledge that is often not documented, even in the most comprehensive knowledge management systems. Here’s a quick example.

eLearning 188
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Stealth mentoring

Clark Quinn

I was looking for any previous post I’d made about stealth mentoring, so I could refer to it in a post I was writing, and I couldn’t find it. In a more informal sense, if you had a leader who shared discussions of their thinking with you, you’d consider that mentoring. Similarly, here, with a difference.

Mentoring 160
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Ten People Every Learning Pro Should Know

Mike Taylor

Write and Organize for Deeper Learning: 28 evidence-based and easy-to-apply tactics that will make your instruction better for learning Patti Shank. Twitter is one of my most valuable sources of learning because of the connections I have made there. One good way to manage Twitter and avoid being overwhelmed by it all is to use lists.